Bandicoot
Member
I am admittedly not a scientist, physicist, engineer, or PROFESIONAL photographer. Despite my humble limitations, over the past decade and more of scrutinizing photos from Minolta lenses i've come to believe their image-making focus (ha ha ha!!!) was for *overall* imaging. I realize there can be a lot of re-touching done to boost/minimize aspects of an image, but i am thinking of pictures i have taken or those where i know little or no re-touching was performed.
By this, i mean to say that Minolta lens engineers seemingly chose not to single out one aspect of image making (such as a strict dedication to micro contrast) to the exclusion of other important facets of imaging such as color rendition, saturation, "warmth", etc. I believe, again in my amateur understanding, that Leica had a similar philosophy in the design of their lenses which may have initiated discussions and led to a short-lived partnership back in the day.
I'm a Pentax person, primarily, when it comes to 35mm SLRs, though I also have an old SRT101 and a couple of Rokkors. I want to second what you say above: there's a set of choices to make in designing a lens and, even with an unlimited budget, it can't excel in every area at once. I always felt that I liked the particular set of choices that Pentax designers made in these design trade-offs, going for overall pleasing images rather than just trying to get the most LPpmm or whatever for the sake of magazine tests. Sort of like the way supermarkets now boast that some of their vegetables are 'grown for flavour' I felt that Pentax lenses were 'designed for pictures'.
Like you, that's what I feel about the Minolta designs too. They and Pentax lenses don't have the same look, but both produce very 'pleasing' images, and I think are more like each other than either is like Nikon's or Canon's particular set of design choices, for example.
Most Rokkor lenses are capable of producing superb images - especially those of the Rokkor-X (MC or MD) vintage. It pays to know which are the "diamonds in the rough" exclusive of sample variation of a specific optical formula, but generally they are amazing - some more so than others.
This goes for everyone's lens lineup - but I'm not aware of any real dogs among the Rokkor primes, and there are some magnificent lenses.
Peter